This essay is an in-depth analysis of Mark Z. Danielewski’s novel House of Leaves (2000). The novel, marked by digital textuality, is an encompassing multilayering system fictionally constructed by different authors and several narratives. Thus, these narratives form a major work that reveals and parodies aspects of the gothic novel, as well as other genres and modes. Nevertheless, its structure is formally connected as a hypertextual narrative. Therefore, it would be inexact to categorize House of Leaves as being either one or other literary object. I propose approaching this novel as “participating” in all these categorizations.
Finally, I read the concept of ‘echo,’ which is presented by Danielewski on Chapter V, as an essential notion to understand the characters' progression through the narrative. This perspective concludes that literature reaches its potential when there is a singular production of echo, or an unpredictable lack of echo, meaning discomfort and strangeness (ostranenie) in the reader’s consciousness.